Fc. Kasolo et al., INFECTION WITH AIDS-RELATED HERPESVIRUSES IN HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS-NEGATIVE INFANTS AND ENDEMIC CHILDHOOD KAPOSIS-SARCOMA IN AFRICA, Journal of General Virology, 78, 1997, pp. 847-856
Novel herpesviruses have been described recently. These include human
herpesviruses 6, 7 and 8 (HHV-6, -7, -8), HHV-6 has at least two strai
n groups, variants A and B. The B strains are predominant in the West
and can account for over 97% of infections in infants. In contrast, th
e A strains are rare and the few well-characterized isolates have been
from adult African AIDS patients. It is not clear whether the HHV-6 v
ariant A strains are AIDS-related and/or whether they can also be acqu
ired as childhood infections and may reactivate later during adulthood
. What contribution geographical variation plays has yet to be assesse
d. HHV-8 has been associated with AIDS-related epidemic Kaposi's sarco
ma (KS), but has also been identified in endemic KS. In regions of Afr
ica where KS is endemic, the onset of AIDS has led to increased preval
ence of KS. In this report, we examine in Zambia, an AIDS epidemic and
KS endemic region, infection with these novel herpesviruses during in
fancy. In blood samples from human immunodeficiency virus-negative inf
ants with first febrile episode, both semi-quantitative PCR and sequen
ce analyses were used to identify HHV-8 in 8% and HHV-6 in 30%, with 4
4% of these variant A; in childhood endemic KS biopsies HHV-8 was dete
cted in 100% and HHV-6 in none. The high viral-DNA loads in the infant
blood samples were consistent with viraemia. This is the first demons
tration that HHV-6 variant A and HHV-8 may be acquired as common child
hood infections.